Experts outlined some of the important innovations that must be included in any strategy to make the nonproliferation regime capable of containing the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
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- Pierre Goldschmidt,
- Peter Hayes,
- Monika Heupel,
- Ramesh Thakur
This person is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.
Monika Heupel is a Visiting Scholar in the Carnegie Endowment’s Nonproliferation Project, assessing the United Nations Security Council’s approach towards nuclear terrorism. Prior to joining the Nonproliferation Project, she was as a Research Associate at the University of Bremen, Germany, (2002-2005), a Research Associate at the German Development Institute in Bonn, Germany, (2005) and a Postdoctoral Fellow at the United Nations University in Tokyo, Japan (2005-2006).
Experts outlined some of the important innovations that must be included in any strategy to make the nonproliferation regime capable of containing the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
United Nations Resolution 1540 would make proliferation more difficult and less attractive, facilitate the dismantlement of proliferation networks, and create momentum to strengthen other aspects of the nonproliferation regime—but major challenges preventing actual implementation need to be comprehensively addressed.